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Home / World

How many visitors can a koala bear? Not many, it seems

By Jean-Loup Rault, Sally Sherwen
Other·
21 May, 2014 05:53 AM4 mins to read

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Britain's Prince William and his wife Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, meet Leuca the Koala at Taronga Zoo. Photo / AP

Britain's Prince William and his wife Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, meet Leuca the Koala at Taronga Zoo. Photo / AP

Everyone loves to get close to a koala. They are an Australian icon and a major ecotourism attraction. A photo with a koala is a holiday must for many overseas visitors.

But how well do these celebrity koalas cope with frequent, up-close or intense interactions from unfamiliar humans?

A study we conducted at the Animal Welfare Science Centre, University of Melbourne, showed that koalas displayed to the public are disturbed by noisy and up-close encounters with human visitors. The results are published this month in Applied Animal Behaviour Science.

The more visitors within a five-metre radius of the koalas, the more vigilance behaviour koalas displayed, which puts them in an alert state.

We also investigated the effect of noise itself: the louder the noise, the more likely koalas interrupted their normal daytime activity and adopted a vigilant posture.

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Not the most active of animals

People often see koalas as nonchalant animals that do little but sleep all day. Hence, the common belief was that koalas will probably not show an outward response to humans.

Read more:
• Koalas that eat leaves and shoot selfies
• Budgeting for survival of species

But our research showed just the contrary: people can disturb koalas. If visitors get too close to them, or if they are too loud, koalas interrupt their normal activity.

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In some cases, this is probably encouraging for visitors: it makes for a much better picture when the koala is looking at you, right?

Why does increased vigilance in koalas matter? Vigilance is quite a normal behaviour. Remaining alert to their surroundings allow animals to detect threat, and decide how to act appropriately.

But problems occur when that alert response is triggered too often, which can result in chronic stress. Vigilance is usually linked to the fight-or-flight response, one of the main mechanisms of the stress response.

This stress response is often an energy-costly mechanism too. This may be a more serious issue for koalas than for other species, since koalas have evolved on an extremely low energy diet of eucalyptus leaves, so minimise energy expenditure by sleeping 18 to 20 hours a day.

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In fact, in this study, the koalas spent half as much time vigilant as they spent looking for food. Hence, this higher time spent vigilant may come at the cost of less time left to forage.

Not enough energy is a problem

These results provided interesting practical knowledge for the Koala Conservation Centre, at Phillip Island, Victoria, with whom we worked. Recording koala behaviour proved to be a valuable, non-invasive monitoring tool to assess visitor-related disturbance in captive koalas.

This means the rangers can act to try to reduce disturbances as much as possible by adopting different visitor management strategies.

This study is only a first step into a complex topic. Further research is needed to determine whether those frequent disturbances actually impact koala welfare. It may, or it may not, but science-based knowledge is required in the field of animal welfare science.

Other factors may also need to be considered, such as previous experiences and the way animals are raised.

Koalas on public display

Some studies on this so-called "visitor effect" raise an ethical dilemma for establishments that display animals to the public. A balance needs to be achieved between visitor experience and education on one hand and animal welfare on the other. Other studies suggest a positive effect on animal welfare from such human encounters.

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Our study was done in semi-captive settings, with koalas able to roam freely in large boardwalk enclosures.

Some wildlife parks allow hands-on experiences with koalas. The impact of these practises on the koalas' behaviour and welfare has not been scientifically assessed, but it does remain a crucial question if we aim to protect our must-see native fauna.

In the meantime, the best attitude may be to keep a distance with this wonderful animal, so that both parties can continue to enjoy living together in a sustainable way.

The Conversation
The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article. They also have no relevant affiliations.

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Photos / Thinkstock

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